L.A. fire destroys just two houses
LOS ANGELES – A wildfire that torched more than 23,000 acres on the edge of the city left a surprising legacy – it destroyed just two homes, a remarkably small number given the size and ferocity of the blaze.
A break in dry, windy weather and a speedy, pinpoint response by thousands of firefighters combined to spare scores of homes that stood in the path of the flames, officials said.
“It’s thinking ahead of where you think the fire is going to be – looking at weather reports, wind speed, humidity, past burn patterns,” said Battalion Chief Lou Roupoli, of the Los Angeles Fire Department.
“It’s like fighting a war,” Roupoli added. “Everybody has a piece of the puzzle. Everybody has a chain of command they report to.”
Coming just weeks after the chaotic response to Hurricane Katrina, the textbook effort in Los Angeles County prompted this reaction from Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger: “Spectacular.”
“We have the best fire department … the best firefighters, the best fire chiefs, the best coordination, great communication,” the governor said.
The fire began Wednesday afternoon in the Chatsworth area of northwest Los Angeles, then spread quickly in high winds.
By Saturday afternoon, firefighting equipment was heading elsewhere, the blaze mostly put down.
There were six injuries, none serious. Neighborhoods that had been evacuated were reopened to residents.
“There is very little – if any – active fire out there,” said Kurt Schaefer, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County Fire Department. “We are getting the upper hand.”
Beyond skilled firefighting, there were two other factors.
The dry, desert winds that fanned the fire were pushed out Thursday by a stream of moist ocean air.
And residents had planned ahead by cutting brush around their homes to create safety buffers.